Next week's stunning solar eclipse in the United States will generate as much science as oohs and aahs.More >>

Next week's stunning solar eclipse in the United States will generate as much science as oohs and aahs.More >>

GADSDEN, AL (WAFF) -

For some in Alabama, it's easy to remember
what the March on Washington was like fifty years ago.

More than two hundred and fifty thousand people took place
in the highly anticipated event. While the march took place in Washington,
D.C., much of the pre-march planning and organizing happened right here in
Alabama.

The march was the largest civil rights demonstration in
history. People from all over the country were there, including James Smith and
Robert Avery, who hitchhiked their way from Gadsden to D.C.

Nearly twenty civil rights leaders were scheduled to speak,
but Smith and Avery said it was Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who caught the
crowd's attention. Smith said, "Once he stood up and started speaking, it just,
you could hear crickets, that's just how quiet it was, you know, just drinking
in his words and things."

After giving the famous "I Have a Dream" speech at the
march, Dr. King was named Man of the Year in 1963 and 1964 by Time Magazine.